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What Philosophy Can Teach You About Being a Better Leader [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 232 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 240x164x25 mm, kaal: 625 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 03-Oct-2019
  • Kirjastus: Kogan Page Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1789660262
  • ISBN-13: 9781789660265
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 232 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 240x164x25 mm, kaal: 625 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 03-Oct-2019
  • Kirjastus: Kogan Page Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1789660262
  • ISBN-13: 9781789660265
Teised raamatud teemal:
Learn how to build and expertly lead a fulfilled and purposeful human-centred organization using the thinking of four of the greatest philosophers.

Traditional management practices, rooted in economics and psychology, have led to a focus on numbers and productivity rather than the people who make those numbers happen. This has resulted in trust in leaders and organizations being at an all-time low. What Philosophy Can Teach You About Being a Better Leader expertly counters this thinking and argues that those leaders who will win in the uncertain and complex world of work, are the ones focusing on their workforce and valuing its members as people, rather than just tools within the process.

What Philosophy Can Teach You About Being a Better Leader considers the main questions plaguing today's leaders through the eyes of four of the greatest philosophers. With the help of Aristotle, Socrates, Kant and Nietzsche, as well as a whole host of other brilliant minds, they smash widely held workplace falsehoods and unveil a new model for empowerment, fulfilment and harmony at work.

What Philosophy Can Teach You About Being a Better Leader is a fascinating account of how we can reconnect company, people and shareholder interests. It answers perennial leadership concerns like questions of people engagement, key performance indicators or even generational differences at work through the lens of philosophy, with its focus squarely on how to live and help others live fulfilling lives at work.

Arvustused

"This book restores to business thinking much of the common sense and time-polished wisdom that modern economic thinking has leached away." * Rory Sutherland, Vice Chairman, Ogilvy UK * "As business leaders we have an innate feeling that we have to have our team follow us and through them we achieve extraordinary results together. Unfortunately our business training and education all tend to focus on the tangible - results, KPIs, budgets and measurements, and through time these turn the focus upside down and our people somehow become means to an end rather than ends themselves and we become trapped in inhumane work environments over and over again. This book offers a real path to change for frustrated leaders and is a must-read for those who have the courage to take the first step towards making their work environment humane again - fertile ground for them and their team to flourish and contribute greatly to customers, the organization and themselves." * Savio Kwan, former President and COO, Alibaba * "At a time when trust in leadership - in business, government and civil society - is fast eroding, this book is timely, asking you powerful questions about your own meaning and purpose as a leader. The most profound answers lie in values and philosophy, which have been neglected in the world of leadership education until now. The four authors rightly place these centre stage." * Dame Julie Mellor, Chair, Demos and The Young Foundation; former Chair, Equal Opportunities Commission and Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman * "How can I flourish in an organization while helping colleagues and the organization itself to flourish? This great challenge of the modern world demands a personal response. The authors of this inspiring book evoke philosophers ancient and contemporary, bringing their insights to life as guides to wise and humane leadership." * Professor John Y Campbell, Economics Department, Harvard University * "This book challenges the way we think about leadership, the habits and conventions that have become so ingrained that we are no longer aware of them. We are used to changing our processes, structures and systems with mixed results. It is time to take a long look in the mirror and ask ourselves deep questions about what it means to be a leader, a leader who wants to flourish and wants others to flourish. These are questions of philosophy." * Professor Nandu Nandkishore, Indian School of Business; former Global Executive Board Member, Nestlé SA, Switzerland * "A good manager is always recognized for their curiosity and ability to question themself. To develop these skills, philosophy is certainly one of the best fields of exploration that exists." * Franck Mougin, Director of Human Resources, Vinci * "This book is for leaders who may want to refresh their leadership practice. It puts you on the spot, bringing a series of philosophers into your life who will raise questions about you and your purpose that cannot be ducked. Leadership is a lifelong journey, and who better as travel companions than quarrelsome Marx and impish Isiah Berlin? Socrates, Popper, the Buddha and so many others have been wonderfully reinterpreted for our modern, uncertain and turbulent world. This book is a double gift of leadership wisdom and philosophical teachings - it's readable, funny and very very wise!" * Shaks Ghosh CBE, Chief Executive, Clore Social Leadership Foundation * "This book is a unique and powerful blend of the insights of philosophers and the authors' extensive practical experience of change management. Reading it will challenge every leader to look again at what empowerment means, how organizations really function, and why human values of fairness and trust are vital for sustainable success in the modern economy." * Sir Martin Donnelly, President, Boeing Europe; former Permanent Secretary, UK Department of International Trade * "Organizations are obsessed with 'Doing' and 'Knowing' and do not create time and space for 'Being'. This book is provoking us to start a new conversation that will bring more meaning and serve the well-being of all." * Anil Sachdev, Founder and CEO, School of Inspired Leadership, Gurgaon, India * "To be a successful leader of a modern, sustainable, purpose-led organization that recognizes its responsibilities to the communities it serves, needs more than skills and ability - it needs authenticity. Authenticity is based in a deep leadership philosophy that inspires the individuals leaders seek to lead to take personal responsibility to do the right thing in every interaction they have with others. People want to be empowered, respected and fulfilled at a human level in today's workplace and to know that the values of the organization they work for not only match their own values but are embodied and evidenced consistently in the leaders they work with. What Philosophy Can Teach You About Being a Better Leader gives those who have been given the privilege of leadership new thinking and practical learning to successfully fulfil their roles by recognizing the need for those they seek to inspire to be engaged with meaning and purpose." * Sir Ian Powell, Chair, Capita plc *

About the authors xiii
Preface xv
Acknowledgements xvii
Introduction: The dehumanized workplace 1(14)
Why philosophy matters
1(2)
How we lost our humanity at work
3(2)
Alienation is the curse of both leaders and led
5(3)
How this book will work
8(6)
Note
14(1)
01 Who can reconnect us with our dreams?
15(10)
Your dream job and funeral eulogy
15(1)
Psychologists' advice about the good life
16(2)
What's wrong with feeling good?
18(2)
Doing what's good for you
20(2)
Summary
22(1)
Questions
22(1)
Notes
23(2)
02 Reason and passion in the humanized workplace
25(16)
Who was Aristotle?
25(1)
Aristotle's middle way
26(1)
A workplace for slaves?
27(1)
A workplace for animals?
28(2)
Nietzsche takes us beyond reason
30(2)
The end of moral authority
32(1)
Breaking away from the herd
33(1)
Life as a work of art
34(1)
The Nietzschean workplace
35(3)
Summary
38(1)
Questions
39(1)
Notes
39(2)
03 Humanizing strategy
41(18)
The rise of the strategist
41(2)
Strategy and inhumanity
43(2)
Is your strategy about capturing value from others - or creating it?
45(3)
The Buddha's strategy advice
48(2)
A philosophy of connectedness in action
50(4)
From goal to path
54(2)
Summary
56(1)
Questions
56(1)
Notes
57(2)
04 Creativity and critical thinking
59(24)
Learning from capital markets
60(2)
Peter Lynch and asymmetric knowledge
62(2)
Warren Buffett and market inefficiency
64(1)
Comparisons and contrasts between Lynch and Buffett
65(1)
Category mistakes in business
66(1)
George Soros and human fallibility
67(3)
Lessons of success from the capital markets
70(1)
Popper's logic of scientific discovery
71(1)
A Popperian theory of corporate strategy, condensed into four maxims
72(3)
The paradox of good intentions
75(3)
An open mind
78(1)
Conclusion
79(1)
Questions
80(1)
Notes
80(3)
05 A question of example and fairness
83(18)
A world divided
84(1)
Max Perutz and the Cavendish Laboratory
84(2)
Leading in a spirit of fairness
86(2)
Plutarch's exemplum
88(2)
Organizational behaviour and procedural fairness
90(2)
Fairness in practice
92(5)
A dangerous collusion
97(1)
Questions
98(1)
Notes
99(2)
06 The gift of authority
101(22)
Introduction
101(1)
Tell them we feel un-empowered!
101(1)
Problem sorted?
102(1)
What can philosophy tell us about how to use our authority to support empowered people?
103(1)
The best of intentions
103(1)
We get it upside down
104(2)
Authority is a gift
106(3)
A question of philosophy
109(1)
Thomas Hobbes -- we are born equal
110(3)
Immanuel Kant -- we are duty bound
113(2)
The categorical imperative and leadership
115(3)
The chief ethical officer (CEO)
118(2)
Key ideas
120(1)
Conclusion
121(1)
Notes
122(1)
07 Meaning and communication
123(20)
The great cascade
124(1)
Why is telling so compelling?
125(1)
The tyranny of the tangible and the fallacy of control
126(1)
Mistaken resistance
127(1)
How we got here -- the rise of the omnipotent leader
128(3)
What philosophy tells us
131(1)
The stoic philosophy
131(3)
Understanding how we come to understand
134(1)
Understanding as a social process
135(1)
The road to meaning
136(2)
Commitment to act
138(1)
Three lessons from David Hume
139(1)
A new way -- sense making not sense giving
139(1)
Creating a space where anything is possible
140(1)
Summary
141(1)
Questions
141(1)
Notes
142(1)
08 From engagement to encounter
143(22)
The annual engagement survey
143(2)
So why this approach?
145(1)
The focus on engagement
146(1)
Is your agenda worthy?
146(2)
The trouble with `buy-in'
148(1)
Engagement is not the problem
149(1)
What does philosophy tell us?
150(1)
An alternative -- encounter
151(2)
How can we embrace encounter?
153(3)
Implications for leadership
156(2)
The real work
158(1)
Changing our practices
159(2)
Being present -- a necessity for encounter
161(2)
Summary
163(1)
Questions
163(1)
Notes
164(1)
09 Values and ethical pluralism
165(22)
A plethora of values
166(2)
What is the problem to which a value statement is the solution?
168(1)
Making it personal
169(1)
In defence of values statements
170(1)
Choosing values as though from a menu
171(2)
The source of moral complexity
173(2)
Objective pluralism
175(1)
Pluralism in practice
176(2)
Moral dilemmas and the middle way
178(1)
Addressing dilemmas
179(2)
The method of reconciliation
181(2)
Conclusions
183(1)
Questions
184(1)
Notes
184(3)
10 The freedom to do what you can
187(16)
Be careful what you wish for
188(1)
What can philosophers teach us about our freedom to act and our responsibility as leaders?
189(1)
The incident of the cat and the wheelie bin
190(1)
Even if organizations were prisons
191(1)
Socrates -- by force of spiritedness
192(2)
No more sweeteners
194(1)
The empowered organization
195(6)
Summary
201(1)
Questions
202(1)
Notes
202(1)
Index 203
Alison Reynolds is a business leader and consultant in strategy execution. She is part of the Faculty in Executive Education at Ashridge Business School. Jules Goddard is a Fellow of the Centre for Management Development at London Business School, where he has taught competitive strategy and creative marketing for 30 years. Dominic Houlder is an Adjunct Professor in Strategic and Entrepreneurial Management at London Business School. He is internationally recognised as a leading business strategist. David Lewis is Programme Director for Executive Education at London Business School and a renowned strategy and leadership expert. The four authors met while undertaking a Master's in Research in Philosophy at the University of Buckingham.